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A. J. Barker (1918–1981)

Author of Pearl Harbor

46 Works 988 Members 9 Reviews

About the Author

Lieutenant Colonel AJ Barker was born in Hull in 1918 and joined the Regular Army in 1936. Commissioned into the East Yorkshire Regiment, he served in Europe, the Middle East and Far Fast. He was a graduate of both the Staff College (Quetta) and The Royal Military College of Science. He retired show more from the Army in 1958 and took up an appointment with the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority. His published works include The March on Delhi (1963): Suez: The Seven Day War (1964): Erithea 1941 (1966); a work on the Mesopotamian Campaign, The Neglected War (1967); and a study of Major General Sir Charles Townshend, Townshend of Kut, Lieutenant Colonel Barker died in 1981. show less

Works by A. J. Barker

Pearl Harbor (1969) 175 copies
Midway, The Turning Point (1971) — Author — 94 copies
Suicide Weapon (1971) 70 copies
Six day war (1974) 53 copies
The Rape of Ethiopia, 1936 (1971) 41 copies
Stuka Ju-87 (1980) — Author — 37 copies
Yamashita (1973) 32 copies
Bloody Ulster (1963) 32 copies
Classic Aircraft of World War II (1981) — Author — 29 copies
Dunkirk: The Great Escape (1977) 24 copies
Afrika Korps (1978) 22 copies

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Common Knowledge

Legal name
Barker, Arthur James
Other names
Barker, Lt. Col. A. J.
Birthdate
1918-09-20
Date of death
1981-06-10
Gender
male
Nationality
UK
Occupations
military officer
author
Organizations
British Army

Members

Reviews

account of the Junkers 87 'Stuka',
A brief history of the Stuka airplane: concept, role, tactics, techniques, development, formations, etc. the dive bomber proved during the Spanish Civil War and in the 'blitzkrieg' of the early days of WW2 in ground support, but which was less successful as an independent bomber during the Battle of Britain.
…famed Stuka pilot Werner P. Roell flew 400 combat missions in the Stuka during which he sank a cruiser. He ended the war w/JV 44 (the Me262 squadron). Roell received the Knights Cross of the Iron Cross, the Iron Cross 1st & 2nd class, & the German Cross in Gold.… (more)
 
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MasseyLibrary | Mar 27, 2018 |
Originally published in 1967 as The Neglected War in the UK and The Bastard War in the US, then reprinted in 2009 with the title The First Iraq War: 1914-1918. It was, of course, not the first Iraq war, which must have happened in 9000 BCE or so; there probably aren’t many places on the planet more blood-soaked than the plains of the Tigris and Euphrates.


Colonel A. J. Barker (I assume he’s not still with us, but I can’t find his dates anywhere*) cranked out dozens of workmanlike military history books, especially in the Ballentine’s series. This is a longer work; Barker must have had some special fondness for the subject. Barker isn’t the slightest bit afraid of cutting into the British military here, and has pretty harsh words for everybody involved short of General Maude.

The WWI Mesopotamian Campaign started out with a very minor objective – the capture of the port of Basra to ensure the safety of British oil fields in Persia – and ended up absorbing millions of pounds of treasure and thousands of gallons of blood. Sort of like the British Empire, come to think of it. The whole thing started out under the auspices of the Indian Army, and was run initially from Delhi rather than London. Barker begins his gripe session by pointing out that “port” was extremely optimistic applied to Basra – it was a wide spot in the river where an ocean-going vessel could anchor and be unloaded by lighter. Not exactly a promising supply head for an army. Nevertheless, a brigade of the 6th Poona Division showed up, landed on a muddy river bank, and promptly began to learn the validity of the Arab proverb “When Allah created Hell, it wasn’t bad enough, so He made Mesopotamia and added flies”. Things consistently got worse; the troops on the ground kept deciding they needed to strengthen their position by advancing just a little further upriver; the supply officers in Delhi kept sending stuff that couldn’t be unloaded and then couldn’t be transported upriver when it was unloaded and then really wasn’t of much use when it finally got to the front. Excursion boats were requisitioned from the Thames and sent out as being suitable for river transport; they might well have been but they were not suitable for the Atlantic Ocean and almost all of them went down before reaching Iraq. The annoying Turks wouldn’t stand and fight, but kept retreating just a little further up river, and when they did stand and fight they turned out to have learned the lessons of trench warfare a whole lot better than the British and Indian troops involved, leading to endless frontal assaults against entrenched Turks.


Barker notes that it would seem that Mesopotamia would be ideal maneuver country; vast alluvial plains that couldn’t be adequately covered by the Turkish troops on hand. The geography actually conspired against it. The only source of water** and supply was the rivers; troops couldn’t venture too far away. And the lack of cover made it difficult to conduct any sort of surprise sweep around the flanks, especially since the Turks had air superiority in the early part of the war. Barker has particularly hard words for the cavalry, and they seem justified – at several battles, the cavalry was sent out to sweep around Turkish flanks only to return some hours later to water their horses: Barker repeatedly calls this “swanning about in the desert”. Eventually the Turks were pushed back almost to Baghdad, resulting in the Battle of Ctesiphon (not the first one there, either). This was a tactical victory for the British but a strategic defeat; General Townshend apparently suddenly realized he was at the end of a long, tenuous and inadequate supply line and began a retreat. He didn’t get too far; the Turks now were no longer local Iraqi militia but Anatolian veterans of Gallipoli, and were not at all in the mood to be “chased all the way to Baghdad”. Geography was on their side again; the river meanders all over the place and Townsend was given the choice of marching overland across the bends and potentially being cut off from the river or maintaining contact with the river and marching three times the distance. He chose the latter and ended up cut off in a bend at the village of Kut.


It was sort of Gordon at Khartoum all over again; the relief column needed to get organized and supplied and march up river and there had to be adequate river transport and positions gained had to be fortified and etc. etc. etc.; Townshend apparently didn’t understand that he was supposed to break out and meet the relief force (to be fair, after a while he no longer had the supplies or troop strength that would have been necessary) and Kut surrendered to Khalil Pasha. The last time a British force this large had surrendered was at Yorktown. General Townshend took a whole lot of grief from home; he was housed in comfort as a guest while his troops – well, were not.


The rest of the war was anticlimactic; “our orders was to break you, an' of course we went an' did.” It might not have seemed anticlimactic to the soldiers dying there, of course. There was a strange interlude involving the Russians, who at one point seemed likely to reach Baghdad before the British did – but 1917 intervened. At least Iraq is now at peace. (There are some haunting mentions of places now back in the news – the 1916 Battle of Ramadi, for example).


I was disturbed a claim by a reviewer on Amazon who says Barker plagiarized a good portion of this book; I haven’t read the putative source, so I can’t comment. Doesn’t seem like the thing for a retired Royal Army officer, somehow. Assuming the writing is his own, Barker belongs in the middle ranks of military historians – no flights of prose, just solid description. The maps are confined to the endpapers, are based on original drawings from WWI staff officers, and are small and difficult to interpret; fortunately there isn’t a lot of maneuver going on.


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*Well, I can’t find my own dates anywhere either.


**Barker doesn’t mention it but the cover story for WWI armored vehicle development was that they were some sort of portable water supply for the Mesopotamian campaign. The name originally proposed was “Water Carriers”; presumably someone noted that this would inevitably be abbreviated to “WC” and, to the eternal gratitude of English-speaking military everywhere, “Tanks” won out.
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1 vote
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setnahkt | 1 other review | Dec 22, 2017 |
Author personally fought over much of Ethiopia in later wwII, and knows the geography, climate, terrain, etc SEL
½
 
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sterlingelanier | Sep 24, 2015 |
A little gem of a book. For example. I didn't know the Russians had Winchesters rechambered for their 7.62 rounds!
 
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SPQR2755 | May 23, 2015 |

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